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Mister D: I did a fabulous write up for this Hulaween event back in 2003 when Ms. Summer was the special musical guest. I also made a bootleg tape of Miss M and Miss Summer singing Bad Girls and Hot Stuff, but alas my computer was finally hacked one day after many years of attempts and so I no longer have the music or the article. That’s where Darrell and I learned a hard lesson…..Betteheads can be the best of friends or the worst of enemies. And for what? But this is about Ms. Summer….so let’s enjoy a couple of songs from her.
(Singer Donna Summer, left, and Bette Midler pose for photographers before attending Midler’s sixth annual “Hulaween” event to benefit the New York Restoration Project in New York, Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2003. The New York Restoration Project was founded by Midler in 1995 and is devoted to revitalizing and developing parks and community gardens. (AP Photo/Diane Bondareff) Photo: DIANE BONDAREFF, STR / BE)
Donna Summer lived with a lot of contradictions in her life: She was a disco queen raised on rock, a religious woman who became the reigning sex symbol of late ’70s pop, a dominant singles artist who specialized in expansive concept records, a singer who epitomized mainstream music in her time and ended up influencing the underground for the next few decades. That life has come to an end, as has Summer’s battle with breast cancer. Summer died Thursday at her home in Key West, Fla. She was 63.
Summer’s first hit was the racy “Love To Love You Baby,” an orgasmic provocation that piled on the sultry, sensual emotion for 17 sweaty minutes. The song, which peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard singles chart in 1976, was concocted by an Italian record producer and songwriter named Giorgio Moroder, whose partnership with Summer also resulted in the relentless futurist robo-funk of 1977’s “I Feel Love.” The best dance song of the ’70s, if not the greatest dance track of all-time, “I Feel Love” didn’t do as well on the U.S. chart as “Love To Love You Baby” (it peaked at No. 6), but its influence proved to be a lot more lasting. “I have heard the sound of the future,” Brian Eno famously told David Bowie after hearing the song during the making of the duo’s Berlin trilogy, and he was absolutely right: Club music would never be the same after “I Feel Love,” nor would sizeable chunks of rock music. (Anyone who’s ever been called “dance-punk” owes half of everything they own to Summer and Moroder.) While its innovations have been borrowed countless times since, “I Feel Love” still sounds thrilling 35 years later.
Summer was born on New Year’s Eve in 1948 in Boston. She started singing in the church, and as a child emulated the girl groups of the early ’60s. By the time Summer was a young adult, she had moved on to Janis Joplin l32 Sexpartylady Lady He Letitbit Navitel Crack Symbian Sex Party Lady Donna Summer: 1948-2012 | BootLeg Bettyv Sex Party Lady u32 Sexpartylady Lady He Letitbit Navitel Crack Symbian Sex Party Lady Donna Summer: 1948-2012 | BootLeg Bettyb Porn